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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Israeli settlers, troops clash


A Jewish settler is pinned down by Israeli troops as authorities evacuated the West Bank settlement outpost of Amona, east of the Palestinian town of Ramallah, on Wednesday. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Joel Greenberg Chicago Tribune

JERUSALEM – In the first major showdown with Jewish settlers during the tenure of acting Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, hundreds of club-wielding riot police fought crowds of stone-throwing protesters who barricaded themselves in illegally built homes in a West Bank settlement outpost Wednesday, hauling off the demonstrators before the structures were demolished.

The fierce clash at the unauthorized outpost of Amona, in which scores were injured, was far more violent than the confrontations between the security forces and settlers during the evacuation last summer of Israel’s 21 settlements in the Gaza Strip and four more in the West Bank.

Embittered by the Gaza pullout and concerned that Olmert may be planning further withdrawals in the West Bank if he wins an election March 28, hundreds of settlers, mostly teenagers from other communities, rallied around the empty houses in Amona and battled the police for hours.

Police in riot gear, some of them on horseback, came under a hail of rocks as they drove back crowds gathered around the nine houses and then broke through shutters and windows to remove people inside.

When officers climbed ladders to reach protesters on roofs ringed with barbed wire, they were hit with paint, eggs, sand and mud. Settlers used long poles to drive the police back and burned tires, sending up thick plumes of black smoke.

Dousing the protesters with a water cannon and riding a bulldozer shovel to the roofs, club-swinging officers forced holdouts into the shovel to bring them down.

“Stop! Why are you doing this?” a settler shouted over a loudspeaker as the police moved in. “Every house destroyed is a victory for Hamas,” said a banner hung by protesters on one building.

As the confrontation wore on, a stream of injured were carried off on stretchers and treated at a makeshift field clinic before ambulances took them to hospitals.

Medics said more than 200 protesters and police were hurt, most of them lightly, but one officer and a youth were reported to be seriously injured. Two rightist lawmakers who were with the protesters were also hurt.

Nearly 3,000 officers took part in the operation to clear the houses, police said, facing a similar number of protesters and other settlers who flocked to the scene. Dozens of demonstrators were arrested.